Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Argument Form That I am Sick of

Still working on the health care bill. Damn, that thing is long.

Anyway, I heard this a lot in college, and I still hear it now. And it irritates the shit out of me.

Person A: Argument A.

Person B: Actually, Argument B. I know that you're wrong, because I used to be Argument A, and I was really self-righteous about it. Then, I had Experience B, which changed my perspective, and I am now Argument B. Don't worry, I understand how you feel. I don't judge you for it, but sooner or later, you'll Experience B, or something similar, and you'll change, too.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Post Mortem

June has been a rough month for deaths.

A handful of celebrities and a few other notable people have passed, including my favorite author, David Eddings.

It's not that I am sad at his death (it is inevitable), or "the waste" (he was just shy of 78), or that "his voice was silenced" (His last novel was published shortly before his wife and collaborator died two years ago.).

I'm not sad, exactly. When I found out that he had died, I started thinking about my memories of his books. I started reading them a bit earlier than most people, although that might have been mostly due to my mother's frustration.

I'm not sure exactly when I learned to read. I know that I was doing word searches before I was in school, and I could sight-read (and sound out parts of) a lot of those words. (My grandmother used to cut out the children's word searches out of the newspaper for me.)

I know that I was reading in kindergarten, because I remember sitting with my teacher and her helping me with the words I didn't know. The school district I grew up in used phonics to supplement regular reading and language arts lessons, and by second grade, I had a good grasp on how to sound words out, and we used the classroom set of dictionaries often enough that I could look up any word was unsure of.

I think our language arts lessons might have been skewed towards the practical--we learned fairly early how to use context clues to guess at the meaning of unfamiliar words, but I do not know what the parts of speech are beyond noun, verb, adverb, and adjective. I'm sure there are more, but as I am not an English teacher, I don't let it keep me up at night.

The early lessons in context clues were extremely useful. A grade-school child can easily become frustrated with flipping through a dictionary every few paragraphs, but being able to think "Oh, that's a color...that's an emotion" makes dictionaries optional to understanding the story. Of course, when you understand the meaning of the word, sometimes your pronunciation falls short. My parents still tease me about some of my verbal mishaps. It turns out that the way it sounds in your head doesn't always match with the rest of the world.

The first time I really started reading was in second grade, when my aunt bought me a beautifully illustrated book of fairytales for Christmas. There was not a picture on every page, but all of them were lovely. The stories themselves were about halfway between Disney and Grimm. There weren't a lot of gory details, but not all of the endings were that happy, and some fairly awful things happened to the characters. This was definitely not the Little Mermaid who was chased around by a guppy and a crab. I was entranced. I finished the fairly thick book, and wanted to read more.

I started reading, a lot.

I went through the American Girls series's. I tore through Boxcar Children and Babysitter's Club. I didn't like Nancy Drew. As the town library was small, and not overly stocked, buying new books was the only way to keep in fresh reading material. My family was far from rich, so my mother started picking and choosing which of her books I was allowed to read. The bodice-rippers ended up in one pile, and everything else in the other.

My mother read me the first chapter of The Hobbit (it was too boring), the first chapter of Watership Down (it didn't make sense to me), and finally, the prologue of Pawn of Prophecy. That one got my attention. While I was only 8 at the time, I could see the similarities between that world and my Sunday School lessons. They were different, but there were similarities. I thought it was interesting.

I dived, headfirst, into Garion's world.

The themes fascinated me. The storytelling kept my attention. Eddings's somewhat dry wit and narrative voice appealed to me enormously (which might explain my occasionally odd sense of humor).

It took me almost a year to finish the first volume (the first three books) of The Belgariad. I wanted to read the second volume, but my mother didn't know where it was. I went back to the Babysitter's Club, but ideas about justice, morality, evil, and the power of the mind simmered in the back of my head.

That year, the same aunt who infected me with the reading bug in the first place, tracked down the last two books the series, and gave them to me for my birthday. She is still my favorite aunt to this day. Sacrifice and redemption were added to the ideas that were floating in the back of my mind.

As I grew up, I learned how to get the books I wanted, and I eventually collected the entire saga of Garion. I started to read Sparhawk's story, but it didn't interest me. Sparhawk was a crabby, middle-aged knight, while Garion was raised on a farm, and wasn't much older than me.

I ended up reading The Losers.

I thought it was awful. For some reason, I read it again. And a few more times. It was different. In the Belgariad, everything was laid out, rather simply. Understanding the Raphael's story was like pulling teeth. And yet, I wanted to figure it out. The message I finally pulled from the book shaped my general morality, to this day.

I eventually got back to Sparhawk, and the rest of his books, but I could see the flaws in them, and appreciate them anyway. The storytelling was comforting. The style and voice were like and old T-shirt that fits just right.

When Eddings died, his obituary (on a book website) listed his published works. I had read all but his first novel. Since it was completely out of print, I went to the library, to track it down by ILL if necessary.

The librarian who helped me with my request was upset when I told her that Eddings had died; it turned out that she and her husband hit it off on their first date when they discovered they were both fans.

I understood her sorrow, but I didn't really feel the same way. It's not that I'm glad he died, but come on: he was pretty old, his wife had died, and it's not like he promised to stick around forever.

I finished High Hunt a few days ago. The story was...something else, but the narration was nearly identical to the voice I remembered. And that's what I miss.

It wasn't the stories, it was the storyteller that made the difference all along.

Monday, May 25, 2009

Operation Catch-a-Creep

I found out today that my landlord likes to snoop while I'm at work.

This is very, very far from okay.

I have just configured my webcam to kick on and record when the motion sensor is activated. I have a feeling that I will have incriminating recordings in another month.

The only question left is, "What should I do with this video evidence of illegal activity?"

And since I fixed my webcam, one picture, for Amanda.



Lady Bug Booties!

Sunday, May 17, 2009

I have a new goal.

I used to be so ...effluent... I'm not even sure that's the word I want to use. Nope, it's not. I just looked it up, it's totally not the word, since the definition is "water mixed with waste matter". The second definition is "that is flowing outward", so maybe I wasn't completely out of my mind. I know a few writer-types that are rolling their eyes as they read this, which just showcases their talent. Do you have any idea how difficult it is to roll your eyes while you are actually reading?

The point is that I used to write longish, occasionally funny and interesting articles, at least once a week. Now, if I write once a month, it's remarkable. Which is my new goal, by the way. To post once a month. I was originally going to shoot for once a week, but, yeah, right. Just so we're clear, this counts for May.

So, my recent projects include: the quilt from Hell, my first pair of baby booties, still unpacking, and fixing furniture. The furniture is my priority project, which means I work on it until I get bored, then I go do something else. That doesn't really sound like it's a priority, but when it's the first thing I do when I get home from work, it actually gets the most work done on it. Except for the booties, but they only took me an hour, and therefore do not count.

The quilt from Hell slowly earned its name by failing at everything. Since I've started, I have coincidentally taken my sewing machine apart three times to fix it. Now, this really isn't the quilt's fault, because the stress on the machine is my fault for using the materials I chose. But I wanted it to be perfect and special, and I have learned my lesson. I would post pictures, but this isn't the project site, and I don't want my cousin to see it before I finish it. She already knows of its existence, which is bad enough, but I don't want to reveal what it actually looks like until I hand her a peculiarly-shaped package. I am optimistic, based on the currert rate of production, that I will finish before May of 2015.

A friend of mine from high school just had a baby, and I decided to make a pair of booties for her. They are green and super-cute, at least they will be, when I grab some more lady-bug buttons since mine are not to be found. I would post pictures, but they are not finished.

I moved, over a month ago, now, and I am still not completely unpacked. Part of it is a storage problem, and part of it is I don't care anymore. At my last apartment, I had plenty of storage space, never mind that I created it. In addition to having less closet space, my bathroom is smaller (That means all of the "bathroom cabinet stuff" is in my linen closet, which now has 2 out of 6 shelves allocated to actual linens. Girly fail.) and I got rid of my desk. My apartment is pretty small, and there really wasn't room for a kid-desk. Plus, a guy at work just got two teenage fosters, and he sort of needed it. So, most of the unpacked stuff is actually waiting on furniture to hold it. I would post pictures, but who cares?

Lastly, in the furniture department: I received a dresser, a coffee table, an entertainment center, and a sewing table. The dresser is old, and it took me almost a month to clean and fix it. I had to re-assemble the back, reattach the drawer runners, re-assemble the drawers, and fix the bottom. I actually gave up on fixing the bottom (decorative feet with little to no hope of being load-bearing) and just propped it up on old textbooks that I dis-like. (Hint: one of these was used as a doorstop. While I was actually in the class.)

The coffee table is huge, and I already have one, so it's my last in queue project, because I'm not sure that I'll keep it when I finish it. It depends on how big it is with the room actually finished.

The entertainment center was originally going to be a quick fix: I was going to slap a coat of green paint on it, since I detest red, which is its current color. And then my aunt told me that it was oak underneath the paint. Due to that, I have been laboriously sanding off red paint for...forever, it seems like. When I finish, it will get a coat of stain and laquer, and I will be middle-aged.

Lastly, the sewing table was taken apart by someone who wanted to refinish it and put it back together, but wasn't capable of the "put it back together" phase. C'est la vie. When I finish the entertainment center, I'll work on it.

Was there anything I forgot? Probably. But I'm sure I'll mention it sooner or later, either that or it wasn't important.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

I had to cave sometime.

Last night, Lucifer gave me an Apple.

Saturday, April 4, 2009

How is this okay?

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/article6022878.ece

I have no problem with burqas. To be precise, I have no problem with women who want to wear a burqa. Or hijab in general, if it's a choice. Hell, I tend to wear looser fitting clothes and higher necklines to work to avoid the eyes of creepy learing guy.

What I have a problem with is this scenario:

Old dude: Hey, wow, you're young enough to be my granddaughter and, damn, you are hot. Let's get married so that I can rape you and call it God's will.

17-year-old-girl: Like, no thanks.

One week later:

Old dude: She's an adulterer, I know she is! I will beat her, according to God's will! She will repent! (And I get off on it, since the bitch turned me down.)

If you want to live under Muslim law, that's fine. Good for you. You're a better person than me. But any place that has laws like this should have a choice: Either allow women who don't want this to leave peacefully, or never receive any foreign aid. It's a simple choice, respect human rights, or figure your shit out on your own.

Saturday, January 31, 2009

I feel.

I try to avoid being a link-o-saurus, but...

If you have any interest in human emotion and perception, and expression thereof, you should check this out. I played with it for an hour last night. It is...fascinating.

Sunday, January 11, 2009

In which I am clumsy.

Also, I went to the ER today. Whoops, I put a knitting needle through my foot. It didn't really hurt when I went (Endorphins are groovy), so I declined pain medicine. So, I'm on crutches, and the pain is starting to begin. Thankfully, the rum has already begun. I'm supposed to use the crutches until there is no pain whatsoever from putting my foot on the ground. Oh, and classes start tomorrow. Yippee.

In which I muse unprofitably.

I'm a bad friend.

I rarely update, and I respond to LiveJournal posts weeks late. It's not that I don't care, it's that I don't care.

Maybe that makes less sense.

The first issue: my failure to update. Every so often, I get a bee in my ear, and start typing hell-fire and brimstone, and after I fact-check (I always try to do this) about half-way through, I suddenly don't really care. 

For example, on Election Night, I didn't stay up to watch returns or speeches. About 7 pm, I saw that Obama was going to win, so I went to bed. So, I didn't see their speeches. Melanie posted Obama's though, and as I read it, the Bob the Builder song started playing in my head. I popped open my new-post window, and started typing. I tabbed back over to read it again, went back to my posting window, and didn't care anymore. 

I think my problems with posting have a source: My life is pretty boring now. I have a pretty decent job in my field. I am content. Also, what with the boring, I have no content. (Like the pun? Shut up, punning is a primary source of excitement in Aynsleyland.) I have no boundless frustration that needs an outlet. I'm happy. Also, funny stories from where I work are mostly nerdy in-jokes, that aren't really funny to anyone else. Except when the other Browncoat and I walked around in nitrile gloves, chanting "Two by two, hands of blue."

This apathy has spread to my checking of LiveJournal updates as well. I read my feeds from Google when they pop up, and I think that has made me slightly lazy. My e-mail tells me when Something*Positive updates. Checking LiveJournal requires me to log in, scroll through new updates until I find the last one I read, then scroll up. There is a solution, checking every day, but you people don't always update every day. And, I apologize in advance, but I don't count the updates primarily concerned with fanfic as updates, mostly because I don't have a clue what the hell ya'll are talking about. Not that I'm not glad that you have a hobby, it's just not important to me. 

Where was I? I'm fighting the urge to just delete this and go watch Narnia. Also, I think some of the melodrama problems that people sometimes have are catered to by the nature of Livejounal. The friending and commenting systems very much feed into melodrama, as do some communities. 

And, content? Over here. I don't feel the urge to get mixed in with all of that. I'm just kind of happy. I don't actually know who is reading this, other than Michelle and Rose. So there is no need to direct my rhetoric in any direction. I am not talking to people. I'm just talking, and maybe someone is listening. Maybe that's why I'm not talking so much.